Friday, January 15, 2010

ICAO Needs To Review Security Rules, Expert Says

News

Aviation Daily Jan 15 , 2010 , p. 16Neelam Mathews

A recent incident in which a man hid in a toilet on an A330 Air India flight from Medina, Saudi Arabia, to Jaipur, in the desert state of Rajasthan, is raising questions about the need for the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) to review its security rules.

In an unusual outcome for most countries concerning the Dec. 25 Air India flight, the stowaway has been released from jail without charges due to a cultural understanding that he was fearing for his life.

“I do not feel ICAO has rules on how to treat stowaways. While the current rules say the captain has the right to decide, he may not have the tools to know the intent of the stowaway,” said Rafi Sela, president of Israel- and U.S-based AR Challenges.

Sela, as the former founder and first president of the ILHSIA Israeli Homeland Security Industries Association and former co-chairman of the Airport Security Task force at HSIA Homeland Security Industries Association (US), had made a presentation to the ICAO Assembly to look at not just safety impacts on airlines, but also security breaches.

Recent incidents of stowaways include a Palestinian who was discovered when he fell 2.4 meters from the nose wheel of a Boeing 777-200 when the plane landed at the Changi International Airport in Singapore from Kuala Lumpur in 2007. That year, a stowaway on Ethiopian Airlines in the cargo hold was discovered in Dulles International Airport. In January 2008, two Ethiopian maintenance workers apparently stowed away in the ceiling of an aircraft on a transatlantic flight that landed at Dulles.

ICAO voted to look at security, but not much has happened on that front recently. At the 18th Annual Meeting of ICAO’s aviation security panel in September 2006, an agenda item included consideration of “the definition of airport security search to include stowaways.”

But ICAO has no real concrete agenda on the issue to speak of, and there is a gap in the international security arena in which each country handles such situations differently.

A ruling by ICAO might create various problems for some countries within the ICAO membership guidelines. Washington, D.C.-based Security Consultant Nick Naclerio, commenting on the Air India incident, told The DAILY, “Once the pilot concluded that the stowaway was not a terrorist threat, he decided to maintain his schedule. Treating him humanely is a judgment call. If our Airline Passenger Management System (APMS) was installed, the crew would have been alerted and perhaps he would have been found in the toilet and turned over to the authorities before takeoff.”

APMS is designed to monitor, track, control, restrain and limit movement of passengers in the passenger cabin during flight, so as to greatly reduce the possibility that an individual or group of passengers seizes control, or otherwise, interferes with the safe operation of the aircraft.

The APMS consists of a computer network with a hard-wired connection to every passenger seat. A display panel in the cockpit and the passenger compartment indicates the status of each passenger seat as to occupancy, and the status of each smart seatbelt, by reflecting one of the following: unfastened, fastened, loosely fastened, locked and unlocked. Only the APMS can lock and unlock the seat belt, explained Naclerio.

1 comment:

The APMS continues to evolve technologically. Last year a DC based IT firm reviewed the technology envisioned when the patent was written in 2002 and concluded that the APMS,if adopted and installed in civilian airliners, could be a wireless network. Furthermore the roles of Artificial Intelligence and Biometrics would be significantly increased in the networks functionality.Last fall, we asked the TSA to recognize the need for an Airline Passenger Management System,APMS,and to fund the development of a working prototype but to date we have had little success in getting a consensus for its need within DHS. Nick Naclerio at NJnaclerio@cs.com

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Am presently contributing editor to numerous international publications on business aviation, defense and commercial aviation. Also write on construction for ENR, a Mc Graw Hill publication. Travel has been a passion that I will carry with me till the end. Write for lifestyle publications and travel on a regular basis. Organise webinars and round tables on subjects I understand!Contributed to Aviation Week for 12 years writing on aviation, space, defense, overhaul and maintenance and business aviation. Was Editorial Director to 3 MRO Asia events in Singapore and Hong Kong.